Question

What makes literary journalism different from early-twentieth-century models of "objective" journalism?
A. Literary journalism focused on a "just the facts'" approach, cutting out the extra descriptive details found in objective journalism.
B. Literary journalism applied fiction writing techniques to nonfiction material, instead of being purely informational as in objective journalism.
C. Literary journalism focused only on gossip while objective journalism focused only on news.
D. Literary journalism believed in reporting on both sides of an argument, whereas objective journalism focused only on one opinion.
E. None of the above options is correct.

Answer

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